Estonian e-Residency: Redefining the Nation-State in the Digital Era

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Working Paper No.3 (September 2015)

Estonia’s new “e-Residency” initiative is an ambitious project that for the first time enables people from anywhere in the world to become digital residents of another nation. Like other pioneering developments in the Estonian “e-state,” the e-Residency project challenges traditional notions of residency, citizenship, territoriality, and globalisation.

'Revolutionary Violence in Anarchism and Republicanism'

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Convened by Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White and Bruno Leipold.

Funded by DPIR and Jesus College.

Department academic speakers:       Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White

External (Other) speakers:                Ruth Kinna (Loughborough), Alex Prichard (Exeter), Alan Coffee (KCL), John Filling (UCL), Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS), Alex Gourevitch (Brown), Guy Aitchison (UCL), and John McCormick (Chicago)

'Revolutionary Republicanism: Three Conceptions'

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Convened by Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White and Bruno Leipold.

Funded by DPIR and Jesus College.

Department academic speakers:       Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White

External (Other) speakers:                Ruth Kinna (Loughborough), Alex Prichard (Exeter), Alan Coffee (KCL), John Filling (UCL), Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS), Alex Gourevitch (Brown), Guy Aitchison (UCL), and John McCormick (Chicago)

Opening Remarks by Stuart White

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Convened by Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White and Bruno Leipold.

Funded by DPIR and Jesus College.

Department academic speakers:       Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White

External (Other) speakers:                Ruth Kinna (Loughborough), Alex Prichard (Exeter), Alan Coffee (KCL), John Filling (UCL), Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS), Alex Gourevitch (Brown), Guy Aitchison (UCL), and John McCormick (Chicago)

European Welfare States and Migrant Poverty: The Institutional Determinants of Disadvantage

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In almost all European welfare states, immigrants face a higher risk of poverty than natives, but the gap between the two groups varies. In examining this variation, our article contributes to the nascent literature on the impact of welfare states on immigrants. We hypothesize that whether immigrants benefit from welfare generosity depends on three intervening factors: immigration policy, labor market regulation, and welfare eligibility rules. We use fuzzy-set analysis to examine the interplay of these determinants in 16 West-European states.

Alexander Betts comments on the Calais migrant 'crisis'

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Convened by Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White and Bruno Leipold.

Funded by DPIR and Jesus College.

Department academic speakers:       Bruno Leipold, Karma Nabulsi, Stuart White

External (Other) speakers:                Ruth Kinna (Loughborough), Alex Prichard (Exeter), Alan Coffee (KCL), John Filling (UCL), Manjeet Ramgotra (SOAS), Alex Gourevitch (Brown), Guy Aitchison (UCL), and John McCormick (Chicago)

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